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Men’s National Team Championships: Day One Report

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Boston, MA — Matches are still being played on the first day of the 2011 Men’s National Team Championships, but several divisions have wrapped up the first round.

In the A Division (Potter Cup), Trinity, Rochester, Princeton, and Yale all advanced to the semifinals. Trinity swept Franklin & Marshall, and Rochester defeated Cornell 7-2. The number 3 match between Rochester’s Andres Duany and Cornell’s Thomas Spettigue was a marathon. By the time Duany won the first game 15-13, several other matches had started and finished. After dropping the first two games, Spettigue battled back to take the third and fourth, but Duany came back to win the fifth 12-10. Rochester will play Trinity tomorrow, and Cornell and F&M will face off in the consolation semifinals.

In the other half of the A bracket, hosts Harvard fought to keep Princeton from advancing to the semifinals. Although Princeton won 8-1, all but the number one and two matches were decided in four or more games. The last match was one of the longest, as Princeton’s Philip Sopher and Harvard’s Tom Mullaney traded point after point, game after game. Sopher won in five: 14-12,3-11,16-14,9-11,12-10. Yale, the team Princeton will face in the semifinals, had an easier go of it in the opening round. The Bulldogs defeated Dartmouth 8-1, with only three matches going past three games. Dartmouth and Harvard will meet in the consolation semifinals tomorrow afternoon.

The B Division (Hoehn Cup) saw Western Ontario, Brown, Williams, and Penn move on to the semifinals. Brown, the 12th-ranked team in the nation coming into the tournament, had the closest match, playing 13th-ranked St. Lawrence. The Saints have been moving up the rankings all season, but the Bears held them off 5-4. Brown will face the division top seed, Western Ontario, in the semifinals. UWO defeated the Naval Academy by a score of 9-0, the most decisive victory in the division. The higher-seeded teams in the bottom half of the bracket — Williams and Penn — both won convincingly. Williams beat Middlebury 8-1, while Penn defeated Bates 7-2. The Ephs and Quakers will play in the semifinals, and the Panthers and the Bobcats will play in the consolation semis.

The C Division (Summers Cup) saw two tight races: George Washington’s 5-4 win over Hamilton, and Bowdoin’s 5-4 win over Colby. Wesleyan finished their season series against Columbia 2-1, thanks to a 6-3 win today. Stanford, the top club team in the nation, faced stiff competition against Amherst, the number two seed in the division. Amherst took the match 8-1. The semifinals, which will be played at Belmont Hill, will be between GW and Wesleyan and between Amherst and Bowdoin. Stanford and Colby will play in one consolation semi-final, and Hamilton and Columbia will compete in the other.

In the bottom half of  the D Division bracket (Conroy Cup), both Tufts and Connecticut College advanced. Tufts took on Colgate, who had moved up several spots in the rankings thanks to a strong performance at the end of the regular season. The Jumbos came out on top with a 7-2 win. Conn, the second-seeded team in the division, played Northwestern, who took two matches off the Camels. As hosts, Northeastern did their best to keep top-seeded Hobart from getting too comfortable. The Huskies pushed the Statesmen as hard as they could, coming up only a match short. Hobart advances to play the winner of the Denison-Georgetown match, which was being played late this evening.

The E Division (Chaffee Cup) matches were all played at MIT. Last week, the Cal and Johns Hopkins women played for the E Division title, with Cal emerging victorious. Tonight, the two schools faced each other in the opening round of the men’s tournament, and Cal again came away with the 5-4 win.  A year ago, Kenyon and Boston College played each other in the opening round of the E Division. Kenyon won that match 7-2, and this time around BC was looking to close the gap. The Eagles came close to upsetting the Lords, but ended up falling 4-5. As of publication, the other scores in the division had yet to be reported.

The F Division (Serues Cup) matches today were played at Northeastern, and several were played late in the evening. Top-seeded Vassar advanced with a 6-3 win over Swarthmore. The Brewers will play the winner of the Charleston/Bucknell match.

The G Division (Hawthorn Cup) has the biggest draw in the championships with 10 teams. G Division play opened with two play-in matches for the main draw, Vermont-Bard and Notre Dame-Siena. After a hair-raising trip down from Burlington in the snow, Vermont looked strong in their 7-2 win over Siena. The Catamounts were scheduled to play USC later this evening. Notre Dame notched a convincing win over Siena, blanking the Saints 9-0. The prize for the Fighting Irish? Playing Ithaca this evening. The other first-round matches in the G Division were held in the evening at Harvard.

The Emerging Teams will start play tomorrow.

 

 

Men’s National Team Championships: Day 1 Midday Report

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Boston, MA — The first round of matches of the 2011 Men’s National Team Championships began this morning.

Matches are being played at Harvard, MIT, Belmont Hill, and Northeastern today, with the first set of matches starting at 11:30 am. The last set will start at 7:30 pm.

In the Potter Cup (A Division), Yale advanced with a decisive 8-1 victory over Dartmouth. With play still ongoing, Rochester has clinched a win over Cornell, and Princeton will advance with a win over Harvard. Trinity also looks to advance with a win over Franklin & Marshall.

In the Summers Cup (C Division), top-seeded George Washington narrowly escaped with a 5-4 win over Hamilton. Last weekend, the Bowdoin and Colby women met in the first round, and this weekend the two Maine schools met again in the first round. Like last weekend, Bowdoin came away with an 8-1 win, but the men had a much harder time of it than the women; the Bowdoin men defeated the Colby men by a score of 5-4. Wesleyan and Columbia, who traded wins during the regular season, also met in the opening round of the C Division. This time around, Wesleyan was the victor, defeating Columbia 6-3.

In D Division (Conroy Cup) play, Connecticut College advanced with a win over Northwestern.

There’s lots of squash left to play tonight and throughout the weekend. Check back with CollegeSquashAssociation.com for updates.

The College Squash Association will be web streaming 2011 Men’s National Team Championships. (See details for more information.)

2011 Men’s College Squash National Team Championship Web Streaming

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Cambridge, MA — The Men’s College Squash Association will be streaming the 2011 Men’s National Team Championships this weekend.

Streaming will occur for matches held at Harvard’s Murr Center.

On Friday from 12:00 PM to 6:00 PM, the webcast will show play from many matches during the afternoon. Some of the matches that will possibly be shown are Trinity and F&M, Rochester and Cornell, Princeton and Harvard, Dartmouth and Yale, George Washington and Hamilton, Wesleyan and Colby, Stanford and Amherst, Tufts and Colgate, Northeastern and Conn, and Bard and Vermont.

On Saturday, streaming will resume from 12:00 PM to 6:00 PM.  On Sunday, the Potter Cup (“A” Division) finals will be broadcast.

To view the webcast, please visit the College Squash Association’s web streaming portal.

2011 Men’s National Team Championship Line-ups

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Northampton, MA — Below are the submitted line-ups for the Men’s National Team Championships, which are being held in Boston, MA, this weekend (February 25th – 27th).

This year there will be 63 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 Emerging Teams Division.

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

Amherst College:

  1. Andrew Krieite (2011)
  2. Brian Warner (2011)
  3. Kevin Cecala (2011)
  4. Charles Loesch-Quintin (2013)
  5. Stephen Severson (2013)
  6. Tom Rapisarda (2011)
  7. David Kerr (2014)
  8. Todd Lavine (2013)
  9. Matt Arnold (2013)
  10. Rodrigo Quan (2014)
  11. Zach Porges (2013)

Bard College:

  1. Dylan Coburn (2013)
  2. Maksim Tsikhanovich (2011)
  3. Aiko Roudette (2013)
  4. Patrick Feronni (2014)
  5. Andy Hoffman-Pantalona (2012)
  6. Alex Vladoi (2011)
  7. Youseng Kim (2012)
  8. Houston Stebbins (2013)
  9. Darden Lajqi (2012)
  10. Trevor Guiderstein (2014)

Bates College:

  1. William Katz (2011)
  2. Nicholas Echeverria (2011)
  3. Kristian Muldoon (2014)
  4. Robert Burns (2012)
  5. Patrick Williams (2011)
  6. Rj Keating (2013)
  7. Dae Ro Lee (2011)
  8. Douglass Compton (2013)
  9. Walter Cabot (2011)
  10. Matthew Baker-White (2013)
  11. Matthew Marchisotto (2011)

Boston College:

  1. Milo Watanabe (2014)
  2. Josh Rosenblat (2012)
  3. Josh Ko (2014)
  4. Teddy Taylor (2012)
  5. Andrew Zarrilli (2011)
  6. Max Orwtein (2013)
  7. Ted Glick (2014)
  8. Britt Gordon (2014)
  9. Danny Gleason (2013)
  10. Nick Gadsden (2014)
  11. Lex Cardone (2013)

Boston University:

  1. Brian Donovan (2011)
  2. Miller Knott (2011)
  3. Jacob Roscoe (2014)
  4. David Scott (2013)
  5. Bassam Al Shamali (2011)
  6. Lu Quan Tan (2012)
  7. Asa Tyler (2013)
  8. Micheal Kates (2013)
  9. Chitwan Singh (2012)
  10. Moustapha Garcia-Bengochea (2013)

Bowdoin College:

  1. Andy Bernard ()
  2. Stephan Danyluk ()
  3. Will Fantini ()
  4. Barrett Takesian ()
  5. Andrew Hilboldt ()
  6. Rahul Madan-Mohan ()
  7. Reid Wilson ()
  8. Andrew Sprague ()
  9. Will Winmill ()
  10. Clint Trenkelbach ()
  11. Brian Gladstone ()

Brown University:

  1. Adrian Leanza (2011)
  2. Bradbury Thompson (2012)
  3. Blake Reinson (2014)
  4. Christopher Holter (2013)
  5. Benjamin Clayman (2011)
  6. Eamon O’connor (2013)
  7. William Bryan (2012)
  8. Alexander Hsu (2013)
  9. Philip Holberton (2011)
  10. Evan Besser (2011)
  11. Charles Lebovitz (2014)

Bryant University:

  1. Nick Brewer (2014)
  2. Cole Rochon (2012)
  3. Casey O’brien (2014)
  4. Daniel Cournoyer (2012)
  5. Connor Crowley (2014)
  6. Marco Santacruz (2014)
  7. Brent Besch (2011)
  8. Maurice Abitbol (2011)
  9. Samir Kothari (2012)
  10. Robert-Paul Weese (2014)
  11. Akshay Poonia (2014)

Bucknell University:

  1. Kirk Bonner (2012)
  2. Christopher Santoro (2014)
  3. Griffin Snyder (2012)
  4. Christopher Murphy (2014)
  5. Benjamin Dicamillo (2011)
  6. Morgan Beeson (2012)
  7. Cooper Mead (2014)
  8. Rod Maier (2014)
  9. Peter Davis (2014)
  10. Ledge Greenfield (2014)

California Berkeley, University Of:

  1. Aditya Gupta ()
  2. Julian Gill ()
  3. Himanshu Jatia ()
  4. Hussain Raza ()
  5. Matt Waid ()
  6. Kedar Viswanathan ()
  7. Liam King ()
  8. Akshay Dugar ()
  9. Ebeb Margollis ()
  10. Oliver Tully ()

Charleston, College Of:

  1. Torey Broderson (2013)
  2. Ben Bevan (2014)
  3. Peter Corbett (2012)
  4. Evan Casciato (2014)
  5. Cameron Davis (2013)
  6. Andre Arguimbo (2013)
  7. Sam Rahe (2012)
  8. Stephen Pond (2013)
  9. Ricky Keane (2014)
  10. Reymar Delos-Santos (2014)

Colby College:

  1. Harry Smith (2012)
  2. William Sullivan (2013)
  3. Alex Fulton (2011)
  4. Nat Cooper (2012)
  5. Trey Simpson (2014)
  6. Daniel Lesser (2011)
  7. William Hochman (2014)
  8. Steve Carroll (2014)
  9. Pete Gabranski (2013)
  10. William Greenberg (2012)

Colgate University:

  1. Gray Huffard (2013)
  2. Sam Brenman (2014)
  3. Steve Carey (2012)
  4. Deombeleg Kyle (2012)
  5. Beddow Jamie (2011)
  6. Bugas Mark (2014)
  7. Norris Kit (2013)
  8. Pellechi Jamie (2011)
  9. Gregory Jake (2012)
  10. Michael Balin (2014)

Columbia University:

  1. Tony Zou (2013)
  2. Graham Miao (2013)
  3. Clay Dahlman (2011)
  4. Andrew Tan (2014)
  5. Alec Goldberg (2014)
  6. Theo Buchsbaum (2014)
  7. Martin Goman (2014)
  8. Dan Gentile (2011)
  9. Anchit Nayar (2012)
  10. Marvin So (2014)
  11. Zach Ali (2011)

Connecticut College:

  1. Caleb Garza (2013)
  2. Hunter Bolling (2014)
  3. John Sluder (2014)
  4. Chris King (2013)
  5. Tyler Stilwell (2011)
  6. Jeremy Wong (2012)
  7. Asa Welty (2013)
  8. Justin Curtis (2014)
  9. Blay Bradley (2011)
  10. Ben Thaler (2014)
  11. Sam Gevirtz (2014)

Cornell University:

  1. Nick Sachvie (2013)
  2. Alex Domenick (2012)
  3. Thomas Spettigue (2012)
  4. Arjun Gupta (2013)
  5. David Hilton (2012)
  6. Rishi Jalan (2013)
  7. Mckay Claghorn (2011)
  8. Owen Butler (2013)
  9. Steven Peever (2011)
  10. Bryan Keating (2014)
  11. Pat Brady (2011)

Dartmouth College:

  1. Chris Hanson (2013)
  2. Nick Sisodia (2012)
  3. Chris Jung (2014)
  4. Robbie Maycock (2013)
  5. Michael Lewis (2011)
  6. Luke Lee (2012)
  7. Brian O’toole (2012)
  8. Fletcher Pease (2014)
  9. Alex Kurth (2013)
  10. Stephen Wetherill (2012)
  11. Ted Schroeder (2011)

Denison University:

  1. Ron Ongaro (2011)
  2. Nathan Hobrath (2011)
  3. William Lawson (2012)
  4. Henry Robb (2011)
  5. Chris Galluccio (2013)
  6. Michael Krasnow (2012)
  7. Dillon Booth (2012)
  8. Coulter Bailey (2013)
  9. Neill Peck (2014)
  10. Peter Huebner (2011)

Drexel University:

  1. Chakkranga Rajabaksha (2013)
  2. Kevin Rose (2011)
  3. Adam Ryan (2012)
  4. Vinayak Kalani (2015)
  5. Nakul Jain (2013)
  6. Kevin Sacherman (2014)
  7. Vaibhav Yadav (2011)
  8. Henry Meigs (2012)
  9. Ravi Patel (2013)
  10. Amey Khanolkar (2013)
  11. Paul Jamrgowicz (2013)

Duke University:

  1. Nicholas Grace (2014)
  2. Andrew Ang (2013)
  3. Frederick Grace (2014)
  4. James Sinclair (2014)
  5. Asad Sheikh (2011)
  6. Colin Baker (2013)

Fordham University:

  1. Colin Corbett (2011)
  2. Amdriy Kulak (2013)
  3. Eli Plangger (2012)
  4. Jack O’brien (2013)
  5. Andrew Grosner (2012)
  6. Ken Fukomoto (2011)
  7. Raymond Chen (2014)
  8. Christopher Souther (2012)
  9. Donald Carey (2013)
  10. Robert O’rielly (2013)

Franklin And Marshall College:

  1. Gabriel De Melo (2012)
  2. Guilherme De Melo (2013)
  3. Mauricio Sedano (2014)
  4. Sujay Barua (2014)
  5. Juan Lopez (2013)
  6. Justin Singh (2013)
  7. Patrick Cunningham (2013)
  8. Aadit Zaveri (2014)
  9. Ryan Mullaney (2014)
  10. Freddy Hernandez (2014)
  11. Jack Cutler

George Washington University:

  1. Islam El-Fiky (2013)
  2. Omar Sobhy (2013)
  3. Jose Calderon (2012)
  4. Michael Bower (2011)
  5. Adam Pistel (2012)
  6. Michael Nair (2012)
  7. Brett Feldman (2012)
  8. Samuel Ehrlich (2013)
  9. Player Haynes (2013)
  10. Chris Bell (2014)
  11. Larkin Brinkworth (2014)

Georgetown University:

  1. Nigel Anthony (2012)
  2. Robert Moore (2011)
  3. Charlie Bolton (2013)
  4. Christopher Ahn (2012)
  5. Devin Moore (2014)
  6. Kevin Donlin (2014)
  7. Anthony Imbesi (2013)
  8. Guillaume Cossard (2014)
  9. Paul Reilly (2013)
  10. Jorden Zanazzi (2012)

Hamilton College:

  1. Martin Bawden (2014)
  2. James Hogan (2011)
  3. Harry Keeshan (2013)
  4. Hal Lee (2011)
  5. Cooper Veysey (2012)
  6. Alex Wood (2012)
  7. Ronald German (2013)
  8. Tim Gray (2012)
  9. Lyman Munschauer (2013)
  10. Mark Clark (2011)
  11. Will Kerr (2012)

Harvard University:

  1. Gary Power (2014)
  2. J. Reed Endresen (2011)
  3. Richard Hill (2011)
  4. Brandon Mclaughlin (2014)
  5. Zeke Scherl (2013)
  6. Nigel Koh (2014)
  7. Thomas Mullaney (2014)
  8. Alexander Ma (2013)
  9. William Ahmed (2012)
  10. Peter Machtiger (2014)
  11. Jake Dockterman

Haverford College:

  1. Andrew Mccomas (2013)
  2. Zef Konst (2012)
  3. Alex Spiliotes (2012)
  4. Chris Tyson (2013)
  5. Tim Ibbotson-Sindelar (2013)
  6. Robbie Thompson (2012)
  7. Matt Liscovitz (2013)
  8. Charlie Michele (2013)
  9. Zeek Barnett (2013)
  10. David Chang (2013)

Hobart College:

  1. Daniel Pelaez (2012)
  2. Grant Palermo (2011)
  3. Luke Esselen (2011)
  4. Tj Dyer (2014)
  5. Carl Ranieri (2011)
  6. Edgardo Gonzalez (2013)
  7. Kevin Kent (2012)
  8. Will Boyle (2014)
  9. Dan Sills (2011)
  10. Julian Snider (2013)
  11. Grant Bercari (2012)

Illinois (Champaign), University Of:

  1. Vedant Bubna ()
  2. Anthony Chau ()
  3. Ajit Bhalodia ()
  4. Reese Hartman ()
  5. Prateek Arora ()
  6. Kevan Leelum ()
  7. Rajiv Tikkavarapu Reddy ()
  8. Aditya Parikh ()
  9. Rohit Bansal ()
  10. Rohan Singh ()

Illinois Springfield, University Of:

  1. John Tienken (2013)
  2. Charlie Dobson (2013)
  3. Carson Buss (2014)
  4. Jamaal Hollins (2014)
  5. Justen Pardo (2013)
  6. Andrew Rice (2013)
  7. Justin Keenan (2013)
  8. Josh Eastby (2014)

Ithaca College:

  1. Brad Kolodner (2012)
  2. Mack Smith (2014)
  3. Ty Broderson (2013)
  4. Ryan Wolfman (2014)
  5. Darius Zheng (2013)
  6. Calvin Healy (2012)
  7. Leisa Robotham (2012)
  8. Natasha Jones-Sikes (2014)
  9. Danny Golden (2012)
  10. David Barken (2014)

Johns Hopkins University:

  1. Rajnush Agarwal (2011)
  2. Nathan Li (2014)
  3. Yoni Krupski (2014)
  4. Anthony Carbone (2013)
  5. Michael Choi (2012)
  6. Yen Theng Tan (2013)
  7. Simran Hundal (2011)
  8. Ryan Daley (2014)
  9. Janvier Chalopin (2014)
  10. Ganesh Swaminathan (2013)

Kenyon College:

  1. Peter Nolan (2011)
  2. Spencer Carlson (2012)
  3. Eric Milbourn (2013)
  4. Pete Heck (2014)
  5. Brandon Bollinger (2011)
  6. Michael Marting (2014)
  7. Rohit Sudarshan (2011)
  8. Chris Wert (2012)
  9. Rob Mueller (2012)

Lehigh University: (Lineup submitted Late – Used Last Lineup from US Squash)

  1. Kyle Yoon (2012)
  2. Will Addis (2013)
  3. Esteban Caro (2012)
  4. Marcelo Caro (2011)
  5. Andrew Moss (2013)
  6. Nigel Corea (2011)
  7. Thomas Mclaughlin (2011)
  8. Chang Liu (2012)
  9. Jaime Alava (2011)
  10. James Hughes (2011)
  11. Foster Rankin (2013)

Maryland, University of:

  1. Michael Sestrich (2011)
  2. Jake Ralston ()
  3. Corey Rosen (2011)
  4. Mark Rosato (2013)
  5. Rahul Vinod (2011)

Middlebury College:

  1. Valentin Quan (2012)
  2. Jay Dolan (2013)
  3. Parker Hurst (2014)
  4. Brian Cady (2011)
  5. Spencer Hurst (2013)
  6. Will Moore (2014)
  7. Cooper Redpath (2014)
  8. Addi Disesa (2012)
  9. Chris Ivsin (2014)
  10. Will Piekos (2011)

MIT (Massachusetts Institute Of Technology):

  1. West Hubbard (2014)
  2. Michael Zomnir (2011)
  3. John Kucharczyk (2011)
  4. Austin Anderson (2012)
  5. Abhi Mitra (2014)
  6. Joseph Lemberg (2011)
  7. Connor Kirschbaum (2013)
  8. Sunny Long (2013)
  9. Stephen Howland (2011)
  10. Jenny Hu (2014)
  11. Adrian Miguel (2013)

Naval Academy, United States:

  1. Allan Lutz (2011)
  2. Hunter Bouchard (2013)
  3. Billy Abrams (2013)
  4. Hunter Beck (2014)
  5. John Richey (2013)
  6. Tommy Mcnamara (2011)
  7. Brad Seidel (2011)
  8. David Koenig (2013)
  9. Clayton Young (2012)
  10. Aidan Crofton (2011)
  11. John Tracey (2012)

New York University:

  1. Shah Aaakash ()
  2. Song Kyle ()
  3. Swanson Daniel ()
  4. Kim Yale ()
  5. Garcia Alvaro ()
  6. Chowdhury Sharik ()

Northeastern University:

  1. Pedro Souza (2011)
  2. Miles Brewer (2013)
  3. Dj Brinkworth (2013)
  4. Max Kachur (2014)
  5. Mike Wegman (2012)
  6. John Ghublikian (2012)
  7. Stan Berenshtein (2014)
  8. Ben Devoise (2014)
  9. Keith Sproat (2013)
  10. Corey Beausoleil (2014)
  11. Daniel Hsu (2013)

Northwestern University:

  1. Jay Dalal (2012)
  2. William Benedict (2012)
  3. Eitezaz Mahmood (2014)
  4. Kwang Roh (2013)
  5. Daniel Wolf (2011)
  6. Gabriel Parra (2011)
  7. Andrew Liu (2011)
  8. Chan Park (2012)
  9. Matthew Leib (2011)
  10. Eric Birnbaum (2011)

Notre Dame, University Of:

  1. Ryan Gisriel (2013)
  2. Ryan Jenks (2012)
  3. Paul Mickan (2014)
  4. Tj Sarda (2014)
  5. Brian Hurley (2013)
  6. Dennis Grabowski (2012)
  7. Mike Todisco (2014)
  8. Matt Sushinsky (2012)
  9. Kenneth Schlax (2011)
  10. Clayton Smith (2014)

Pennsylvania, University Of:

  1. Thomas Mattsson (2012)
  2. Dan Greenberg (2013)
  3. James Clark (2011)
  4. Porter Drake (2011)
  5. Will Browne (2011)
  6. Trevor Mcguinness (2012)
  7. Dan Judd (2014)
  8. John Dudzik (2014)
  9. Justin Ang (2014)
  10. Akhilesh Nayak (2012)

Princeton University:

  1. Todd Harrity (2013)
  2. David Letourneau (2011)
  3. Chris Callis (2012)
  4. Kelly Shannon (2012)
  5. Peter Sopher (2011)
  6. David Pena (2012)
  7. Philip Sopher (2011)
  8. Clay Blackiston (2012)
  9. Nikhil Seth (2011)
  10. Steve Harrington (2013)
  11. Ash Egan (2014)

Purdue University: (Lineup submitted Late – Used Last Lineup from US Squash)

  1. Danish Akhtar (2012)
  2. Matt Murphy (2011)
  3. Kunal Raheja (2011)
  4. Rudra Shriram (2012)
  5. Aabhas Sharma (2011)
  6. Prateek Tayal (2012)
  7. Simran Guliani (2013)
  8. Tony Font (2012)
  9. Shreyas Prabhu Tandulkar (2012)
  10. Yash Wagh(2012)

Rochester, University Of:

  1. Benjamin Fischer (2013)
  2. William Newnham (2011)
  3. Andres Duany (2013)
  4. Joseph Chapman (2012)
  5. Hameed Ahmed (2011)
  6. Adam Perkiomaki (2013)
  7. Juan Pablo Gaviria (2013)
  8. Matthew Domenick (2012)
  9. Oscar Lopez (2013)
  10. Karm Kumar (2014)
  11. Edwin Goncharuk (2011)

Siena College:

  1. Viraj Patel (2011)
  2. Kevin Walsh (2011)
  3. Cory Tedesco (2011)
  4. Craig Shepard (2011)
  5. Thaddeus Savery (2013)
  6. David Harris (2011)
  7. Brian Hicks (2011)
  8. Zachary Miller (2014)
  9. John Schoonmaker (2014)
  10. Matt Eliseo (2014)

Southern California, University Of:

  1. Farooq Shaheen
  2. Devansh Mittal
  3. Scott Dunn
  4. James Bradicich
  5. Hannah Gotfredson
  6. Sam Fisher
  7. Shawn Ahern
  8. Satyen Motiani
  9. Harish Vemuri
  10. Heather Warburton

St. Lawrence University:

  1. Alex Dodge (2011)
  2. Amay Merchant (2013)
  3. Vir Seth (2014)
  4. Jermaine Xaba (2012)
  5. Will Campo (2014)
  6. Tyler Stout (2011)
  7. Michael Badali (2012)
  8. Thoma Kraft (2012)
  9. Russell Woeltz (2013)
  10. Nate Ticho (2014)
  11. Peter Montesano (2011)

Stanford University: (Lineup submitted Late – Used Last Lineup from US Squash)

  1. Sam Gould ()
  2. Chris Boldock ()
  3. Tyler Strand ()
  4. Mark Wieland ()
  5. Trent Hazy ()
  6. Teddy Bower ()
  7. Derek Rowley ()
  8. Paul Lee ()
  9. John Han ()
  10. Chang Yea ()

Swarthmore College:

  1. Tarit Rao-Chakravorti ()
  2. Manuk Garg ()
  3. Joravar Dhaliwal ()
  4. Rahul Garg ()
  5. Sudarshan Gopaladesikan ()
  6. James Bannon ()
  7. Faraz Hayat ()
  8. Jake Carter ()
  9. Collin Smith ()
  10. Peter Haury ()

Trinity College:

  1. Vikrum Malhotra (2012)
  2. Parth Sharma (2011)
  3. Andres Vargas (2011)
  4. Chris Binnie (2011)
  5. Randy Lim (2011)
  6. Antonio Diaz (2012)
  7. Johan Detter (2013)
  8. Juan Flores (2013)
  9. Daniel Echevarria (2011)
  10. Travis Judson (2011)
  11. Gedd Disesa (2011)

Tufts University:

  1. Alex Gross (2011)
  2. Ben Rind (2011)
  3. Hank Miller (2012)
  4. Andrew Kim (2011)
  5. Michael Abboud (2014)
  6. Jeremy Ho (2014)
  7. Tesfa Hailu (2014)
  8. Andrew Meleney (2013)
  9. Ben Briggs (2014)
  10. Luke Metcalf (2012)
  11. Edward Wronsky (2012)

Vanderbilt University:

  1. Zachary Hoyt (2012)
  2. Tyler Kopp (2012 (C))
  3. Dylan Tracy (2014)
  4. David Kyungsoo Woo (2012)
  5. Austin Schiff (2012 (C))
  6. Amos Kendall (2013)
  7. Zulkifli Ahmad (2013)
  8. Thomas Matthews (2013)
  9. Bert Van Den Hoff (2014)
  10. Alex Cuffe (2014)

Vassar College:

  1. Jake Harris (2013)
  2. Arjun Jain (2011)
  3. Medhi Naqvi (2011)
  4. Max Middleton (2012)
  5. Andrew Lindsay (2013)
  6. Ansser Sadiq (2011)
  7. Oliver Newman (2012)
  8. William English (2012)
  9. Ricardo Espinosa (2014)
  10. Riley Mccabe (2014)

Vermont, University Of:

  1. Sam Beatt (2012)
  2. Johnny Berger (2011)
  3. Teddy Abraham (2011)
  4. Aaron Spiritos (2012)
  5. Andrew Bailey (2012)
  6. Andrew Lincoln (2011)
  7. Page Smith (2012)
  8. Devon Winter (2013)
  9. Mike Mchugo (2012)
  10. Will Vitagliano (2012)

Washington University (St. Louis):

  1. Hyun Ho Rhee (2014)
  2. James Underwood (2013)
  3. Stirling Hedderich (2013)
  4. Sheldon Pariser (2013)
  5. Zac Bluestone (2014)
  6. Cam Seo (2014)
  7. Kasidis Horsangchai (2013)
  8. Lucas Shapiro (2014)
  9. Lawrence Liu (2014)

Washington, University Of:

  1. Robert Young (2011)
  2. Johann Huang (2014)
  3. Steven Stevenson (2011)
  4. Parisa Khalighi (2012)
  5. Benjamin Bryan (2011)
  6. Eugene Chau (2013)
  7. Kevin Park (2012)
  8. Nathan Bilbao (2012)
  9. Jakob Lupa (2014)

Wesleyan University:

  1. John Steele ()
  2. Matthew Candal ()
  3. Dale Kobrin ()
  4. Alexander NuñEz ()
  5. Jeffery Berman ()
  6. Zander Nassikas ()
  7. Ethan Moritz ()
  8. Luke Wherry ()
  9. Shivan Bhavnani ()
  10. Keitaro Sagawa ()

Western Ontario, University Of:

  1. Kimesh Chetty ()
  2. Brian Hong ()
  3. Ryan Herden ()
  4. Yeshale Chetty ()
  5. Albert Shoihet ()
  6. Adam Engel ()
  7. Tashlin Reddy ()
  8. Andrew Silvestri ()
  9. Rafik Bhaloo ()
  10. Adrian Ostbye ()

Williams College:

  1. Will Morris (2012)
  2. Will Gruner (2011)
  3. Jeremy Hermann (2011)
  4. Nick Marks (2013)
  5. Taylor Foehl (2014)
  6. Jack Ervasti (2013)
  7. Alec Greaves-Tunnell (2013)
  8. Andy Maruca (2014)
  9. Jared Zuckerman (2012)
  10. Ryan Eagan (2013)

Yale University:

  1. Hywel Robinson (2013)
  2. Naishadh Lalwani (2011)
  3. Kenneth Chan (2013)
  4. Richard Dodd (2013)
  5. John Roberts (2012)
  6. John Fulham (2011)
  7. Ryan Dowd (2012)
  8. Robbie Berner (2012)
  9. Neil Martin (2014)
  10. Cj Plimpton (2011)
  11. Mike Maruca (2011)

2011 Men’s National Team Championships Brackets

Northampton, MA — Below are the brackets for the 2011 Men’s National Team Championships, which are being played this weekend, February 25th – 27th. Matches will be played at Harvard, MIT, Northeastern, Belmont Hill, and the Union Boat Club.

This year there will be 63 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 Emerging Teams Division.

Trinity College will be looking to earn its 13th consecutive National Championship with a Potter Cup victory.

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

Practice Times: On Thursday, there will be practice times available at Harvard University. To request a practice time, please email Chris Smith.

Attractions and Restaurants: For area attractions and restaurants listings, please visit HarvardSquare.com.

Coaches’ Meeting: Friday, 8:30 PM on the 3rd Floor of Harvard’s Murr Center. 8:00 PM for food.

Court-side Food: E-mail team orders with your school’s name, what meal (breakfast, lunch, or dinner) you are ordering for, and when you want it. Orders need to placed by 9 PM the night before for breakfast and lunch orders, and 12 PM for dinner that night. Discounts and special deals for 7 or more meal orders. Menus – Breakfast and Lunch/Dinner.

Sportsmanship and Refereeing at Team Championships: There will be professional referees at the 2011 Men’s National Team Championships. Coaches, please review the Sportsmanship and Refereeing at Team Championships article with your team prior to competition.

Award Ceremony: Saturday, 7:00 – 7:30 PM at the Lee Family Hall of Athletic History at the Murr Center.

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 Streaming (Details): The College Squash Association will be web streaming 2011 Men’s National Team Championships.

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

Court Key (Link is for Directions): H = Harvard University, MIT = Massachusetts Institute of Technology, NEU = Northeastern University, BH = Belmont Hill, UBC = Union Boat Club

2011 Potter Cup (A Division)

Enter Results

Con Final Con Semi Consolation Teams 1st Rd Semifinal Final
Harvard, 5-4 Cornell, 7-2 F&M Trinity (1) Trinity 9-0 Trinity, 6-3 Trinity, 5-4
F&M (8)
Cornell Cornell (5) Rochester, 7-2
Rochester (4)
Harvard, 8-1 Harvard Princeton (3) Princeton, 8-1 Yale, 7-2
Harvard (6)
Dartmouth Dartmouth (7) Yale 8-1
Yale (2)

3-4 Playoff: Princeton d. Rochester, 5-4
7-8 Playoff: Dartmouth d. F&M, 7-2

2011 Hoehn Cup (B Division)

Enter Results

Con Final Con Semi Consolation Teams 1st Rd Semifinal Final
St. Lawrence, 5-4 St. Lawrence, 5-4 Navy Western Ontario (9) Western Ontario, 9-0 Western Ontario, 8-1 Western Ontario, 7-2
Naval Academy (16)
St. Lawrence St. Lawrence (13) Brown, 5-4
Brown (12)
Middlebury 5-4 Middlebury Williams (11) Williams, 8-1 Penn, 6-3
Middlebury (14)
Bates Bates (15) Penn, 7-2
Penn (10)

11-12 Playoff: Williams d. Brown 8-1
15-16 Playoff: Bates d. Navy, 6-3

2011 Summers Cup (C Division)

Enter Results

Con Final Con Semi Consolation Teams 1st Rd Semifinal Final
Columbia, 5-4 Columbia, 7-2 Hamilton George Washington  (17) George Washington 5-4 George Washington, 5-4 Bowdoin, 5-4
Hamilton (24)
Columbia Wesleyan (21) Wesleyan 6-3
Columbia (20)
Colby, 7-2 Colby Bowdoin (19) Bowdoin 5-4 Bowdoin, 5-4
Colby (22)
Stanford Stanford (23) Amherst, 8-1
Amherst (18)

19-20 Playoff: Amherst d. Wesleyan, 7-2
23-24 Playoff: Hamilton d. Stanford, 5-4

2011 Conroy Cup (D Division)

Enter Results

Con Final Con Semi Consolation Teams 1st Rd Semifinal Final
Northeastern, 5-4 Northeastern 5-4 Northeastern Hobart (25) Hobart, 5-4 Hobart 8-1 Conn, 5-4
Northeastern (32)
Denison Georgetown (29) Georgetown, 5-4
Denison (28)
Northwestern, 7-2 Colgate Tufts (27) Tufts, 7-2 Conn, 9-0
Colgate (30)
Northwestern Northwestern (31) Conn, 7-2
Conn (26)

27-28 Playoff: Tufts d. Georgetown, 5-4
31-32 Playoff: Colgate d. Denison, 6-3

2011 Chaffee Cup (E Division)

Enter Results

Con Final Con Semi Consolation Teams 1st Rd Semifinal Final
BC, 5-4 BC 6-3 Haverford Haverford (33) Vanderbilt 6-3 Vanderbilt, 5-4 Vanderbilt, 6-3
Vanderbilt (40)
BC Kenyon (37) Kenyon, 5-4
Boston College (36)
JHU, 7-2 Washington MIT (35) MIT 6-3 MIT, 5-4
Washington (38)
JHU California (39) Cal, 5-4
JHU (34)

35-36 Playoff: Kenyon d. Cal 5-4
39-40 Playoff: Haverford d. Washington 5-4

2011 Serues Cup (F Division)

Enter Results

Con Final Con Semi Consolation Teams 1st Rd Semifinal Final
Drexel, 5-4 Charleston, 6-3 Swarthmore Vassar (41) Vassar, 6-3 Bucknell, 7-2 Bucknell, 5-4
Swarthmore (48)
Charleston Charleston (45) Bucknell, 8-1
Bucknell (44)
Drexel, 6-3 Drexel BU (43) BU, 7-2 BU, 5-4
Drexel (46)
Fordham Lehigh (47) Lehigh, 6-3
Fordham (42)

43-44 Playoff: Vassar d. Lehigh, 7-2
47-48 Playoff: Fordham d. Swarthmore, 6-3

2011 Hawthorn Cup (G Division)

Enter Results

Main Round:

  • Match 1: Vermont d. Bard, 7-2
  • Match 2: Notre Dame d. Siena, 9-0
  • Match 3: Vermont d. Southern California, 5-4
  • Match 4: Washington (St. Louis) d. Illinois (Champaign), 9-0
  • Match 5: Bryant d. Purdue, 7-2
  • Match 6:  Ithaca d. Notre Dame, 5-4
  • Match 7: Washington (St. Louis) d. Vermont, 9-0
  • Match 8: Bryant d. Ithaca, 5-4
  • Match 9 (Finals): Washington (St. Louis) d. Bryant 9-0
  • Match 10 (53/54 Playoff): Vermont d. Ithaca, 6-3

Consolation Round Robin Group A: Bard; Notre Dame; Illinois (Champaign)

  • Bard d. Notre Dame, 6-3
  • Illinois (Champaign) d. Notre Dame, 5-4
  • Illinois (Champaign) d. Bard, 8-1

Consolation Round Robin Group B: Siena; E = Loser of USC vs Bard/Vermont winner; Purdue

  • USC d. Siena
  • USC d. Purdue
  • Purdue d. Siena

Crossover Final Match on Sunday:

  • #1’s Illinois (Champaign) d. USC
  • #2’s Purdue d. Bard, 5-4
  • #3’s Notre Dame d. Siena, 9-0

2011 Emerging Teams
5-Person Teams

Enter Results

Saturday:

  • NYU d. Duke, 4-1
  • Maryland d. Illinois-Springfield, 5-0
  • Duke d. Illinois-Springfield, 4-1
  • Maryland d. NYU, 4-1

Sunday

  • Maryland d. Duke, 5-0
  • NYU d. Illinois-Springfield, 5-0

2010-2011 Dunlop Men’s College Squash Team Rankings (2/21/2011)

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[rankingimage] Northampton, MA — Today, the men’s College Squash Association released the eighth and final [mtr] of the season.

The final rankings of the season encompass two weeks of matches.  Through the triangle formula, Columbia, Wesleyan, and Colby ended up 20th, 21st, and 22nd.  The three squads will compete in the Summers Cup (“C” Division) of the Men’s National Team Championships.

Positions 28 through 40 have been fluid all season.  The final rankings of the regular season were no different. Colgate and Johns Hopkins made the largest moves of the teams in this area of the rankings.

The College of Charleston jumped 13 spots thanks to many matches late in the season.  They ended up at number 46.

Below are the 2010-2011 Men’s College Squash Association Team Rankings as of February 21, 2011. Listed after each school’s name is their previous ranking.

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

2011 Howe Cup Celebration Photos

Princeton, NJ — Yesterday, Yale University won the 2011 Women’s College Squash National Team Championship (Howe Cup) over Harvard University, 5-4.

CollegeSquashAssociation.com will have many photos from each division of the tournament in the coming weeks; however, here are a few from the championship celebration.

Click on the thumbnails to view a larger version of each photo. For additional photos from the 2011 Howe Cup, please visit mtbello.com.

Yale Women Win 2011 National Title

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Princeton, NJ — A week ago, Yale and Harvard faced each other for the 2011 Ivy League title. It was an epic match, coming down to the fifth game of the final match. Yale, then the number two team in the nation, upset the defending national champions 5-4.

Today’s rematch had even more at stake, with the Bulldogs and the Crimson competing for the Howe Cup, the top team title in women’s college squash. Playing at Princeton University, Yale prevailed 5-4 to win the 2011 Women’s National Team Championships. With the score tied 4-4, Yale first-year Kim Hay pulled out a clutch 3-1 win over Harvard’s June Tiong to seal the win for the Bulldogs.

The Bulldogs, who are led by head coach Dave Talbott, associate head coach Gareth Webber, and assistant coach Pam Saunders, came into the match undefeated this season. After a 5-4 scare in early December to Penn, Yale had turned in a series of dominant performances throughout the season. Dartmouth and Trinity both managed push the Bulldogs to 6-3, but Yale’s biggest test didn’t come until the final dual match of the season, when they defeated Harvard 5-4 in a truly epic contest. Playing at Harvard, the two team’s came into the final match tied 4-4, and Yale’s Caroline Reigeluth defeated Harvard’s Sarah Mumanachit 11-7 in the fifth game to preserve a perfect regular season for the Bulldogs. Yale was presented with the Barhite Award at the Women’s College Squash Association’s award ceremony last night; the Barhite Award is given annually to the team with the best dual-match record of the season.

The Crimson, who are under the direction of Mike Way, the Gregory Lee ’87 and Russell Ball ’88 Endowed Coach for Squash at Harvard University, and assistant coach Chris Smith, opened the season in an impressive fashion. Coming into February, the Crimson top nine had not dropped a single game to another team. It looked like the 2010 Howe Cup winners would continue their unbeaten streak into the 2011 finals. Then in early February Penn gave Harvard a 5-4 scare of their own, and Trinity and Princeton won two matches each off the Crimson. The loss to Yale bumped Harvard down to the number two seed coming into the tournament.

Yale’s and Harvard’s paths to the finals at Princeton were almost parallel. Yale swept Dartmouth 9-0 in the opening round, with only the number one match between Yale senior captain Logan Greer and Dartmouth captain Hannah Conant going beyond three games. Harvard opened with a 9-0 sweep of Cornell; senior captain Alisha Mashruwala’s number three match with Jesse Pacheco was the only contest to take more than three games.

In the semifinals, Harvard pulled out a hard-fought win 6-3 over third-ranked Trinity. Two of Trinity’s three wins were five-game matches, and the other Bantam win went to four games. Of the other matches, only three were decided in three games; Harvard won the match, but Trinity made them work for it.

While the Yale-Princeton semifinal did not have as many four- and five-game matches, the Bulldogs hardly had an easy trip to the finals. Coming into the final round of matches, the two teams were tied 3-3 and the stands were packed with Princeton fans. But Yale pulled away in the final round, winning all three matches, including two three-game wins.

The 2011 Howe Cup final featured the top two teams in the nation, closely matched squads with long traditions of competitive success. Today’s Howe Cup win is Yale’s seventh, and with their national titles in 2004, 2005, 2006, the Bulldogs are now the winningest program in the last ten years.

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

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Princeton, NJ — The final morning of the Women’s National Team Championships has already seen some great squash.

The action began at 8:30 AM at Princeton’s Jadwin Gymnasium with the B, C, and D Division consolation finals. All three consolation finals were close. In the B consolation, perennial rivals Bates and Mount Holyoke battled back and forth, with Bates coming out on top of the 5-4 win. The Wesleyan-Bowdoin C Division consolation came down to the fifth game of the final match, and Wesleyan clinched the 5-4 win. Smith and Wellesley have gone back and forth all season, and the Seven Sisters rivals met yet again in the D Division consolations. In 6-3 decision, Smith won to end the season series with a 3-1 advantage.

Cal and Johns Hopkins won their respective round robins to make it to the E Division finals. Both schools were in the Emerging Teams Division last season, and to make it to championships with full nine-player teams was in itself an accomplishment. Cal finished the weekend with a perfect 4-0 record, winning the E Division.

Georgetown came into the Women’s National Team Championships seeded seventh, and they upset St. Lawrence and Smith to make it Epps Cup (D Division) finals against top-seeded Connecticut College. Despite a strong effort from the Camels, Georgetown pulled off their third upset of the weekend to win the D Division.

Franklin & Marshall and Hamilton, the top two seeds in the C Division, met in the Walker Cup finals. When the teams met in the regular season, it was an incredibly close match, and today was no different. F&M ultimately prevailed in a 5-4 match that was characterized by energetic play and good sportsmanship on both sides.

Brown and Williams met in the Kurtz Cup (B Division) finals. Brown was the top seed coming into the division, and the Bears had defeated Bates in the semifinals. In Williams’ semifinal match, sophomore Alli Rubin came back from being down 1-9 in the fifth game to win 11-9 over Mount Holyoke captain Shara Robertson, helping the Ephs to a 6-3 win. In the finals, the two teams traded matches back and forth until Brown pulled away to win 6-3.

Congratulations to all the teams who competed this weekend!