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Johns Hopkins Magazine


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"  The Rivalry   For six days in April, the Blue Jays prepped for their historic 100th battle against the Maryland Terrapins. Go inside the locker room and onto the field with the men's lacrosse team. By Dale Keiger Photos by Mike Ciesielski At 8:09 on a Saturday evening in April, Kyle Harrison approaches the large blue H painted on the turf of Hopkins' Homewood Field. Harrison is a lithe young man, swift and quick as light, tough and durable and possessing the preternatural grace and balance of an extraordinary athlete. He wears on his Hopkins lacrosse jersey an 18, the same number worn by his father, Miles, when he played football for Morgan State University. All eyes are on the younger Harrison. It is his job to start the game by winning the face-off, winning the ball. In front of the Hopkins bench, some of his teammates jump up and down, discharging a little of the tension and excitement that has been building all week. They know they are on national cable television, they know sportswriters from major publications will be writing about what Sports Illustrated has called one of the greatest rivalries in all of college sports, and they can hear the roar from the capacity crowd, 10,555 people in a stadium that seats 8,500. The Jays rank first in the country, the most talented, if not always the most focused, team in NCAA lacrosse. They are sick of hearing about tough Maryland, bruising Maryland, hard-working Maryland. They are tired of drills and game film and coaches hollering at them. They are ready to go. Harrison clamps down on his mouth guard and crouches over the ball that rests on the red face-off X that tonight is the epicenter of college lacrosse. On the sideline, Hopkins head coach Dave Pietramala, A&S '90, folds his arms across his chest and waits to see if over the last five days he's prepared his team. He'll soon know. Day One "
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