(We apologize if you're receiving this email for the second time; the
Friends of Football will consolidate its email addresses into one complete
list by this fall)
Hello again Harvard Football alums, Friends and fans,
In case you missed this news from last week, Harvard Football will have a
new home on the radio this fall. (see release below)
Also, thought you might be interested to know in case you missed it that
Ted Donato '91 was named Harvard's new men's hockey coach this past Friday.
(Globe story below)
Thanks for your support of Harvard Football!
Harvard Football To Be Heard On WWZN 1510 The Zone In 2004
All 10 Crimson games to air live on the Boston all-sports station
July 1, 2004
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- Harvard Football will have a new home on the radio in the
fall as all 10 Crimson games will be broadcast live on WWZN-AM 1510, better
known locally as 1510 The Zone.
The partnership will allow Harvard to have its football games heard in a
much larger geographic area than in previous years. The WWZN signal is
powered by a 50,000-watt transmitter, giving the station a reach from
metro-Boston, west to Worcester, north into New Hampshire, and south into
Rhode Island and Connecticut.
The station also serves as the flagship for the Boston Celtics radio
network, has been the local radio carrier of Notre Dame football, and has
aired Harvard and Boston University hockey games. It is the local broadcast
outlet of Sporting News Radio.
"I am excited to add Harvard Football to the growing list of local
programming on 1510 The Zone," said WWZN general manager Michael Winn. "It
is only natural to have two entities with such rich traditions as Harvard
and The Sporting News team up for a program like this, and I'm thrilled to
give our listeners and the business community a 50,000-watt radio station
for the 2004 Harvard football season."
Bernie Corbett, author of Harvard Football and the forthcoming The Only
Game That Matters, will begin his seventh season as Harvard's play-by-play
announcer. Former Harvard football great Mike Giardi '94 will begin his
10th year as the Crimson's color analyst.
The Crimson, which was 7-3 overall and 4-3 in the Ivy League last season,
begins its 2004 season Sept. 18 against Holy Cross at Harvard Stadium.
The book on Donato: Harvard coach
By Andy Nesbitt, Boston Globe Staff
July 3, 2004
No matter what Ted Donato accomplished during his 13-year career in the
National Hockey League, there was always a little voice inside his head
reminding him of what he really wanted to do -- become the hockey coach at
his alma mater, Harvard University.
So when he learned last month that Mark Mazzoleni had stepped down from the
position, Donato, who has no coaching experience, took action.
"I started beating the phone lines, quite honestly, and just tried to let
the people involved with the decision know that I was interested and how I
felt about the position and my enthusiasm about the program," said the
35-year-old Donato, who graduated from Harvard in 1991. "I was fortunate
enough to be able to sit down with them and go through the process."
Harvard interviewed six candidates for the job.
That search officially ended yesterday. At a press conference attended by
family and friends, Donato, who spent eight-plus years with the Bruins, was
named the 11th head coach in school history.
"I think that this position has always been at the back of my mind, it's a
dream job," said Donato, the Most Valuable Player of the 1989 NCAA Frozen
Four, Harvard's only national championship team. "I have obviously a
special place in my heart for Harvard University and the Harvard hockey
program. I think the one special thing about a Harvard education is that it
allows you options and this is absolutely the best option for me at this
stage in my life. I jumped at this as soon as I could."
"We were thrilled that he expressed an interest but we probed pretty hard
in the interview process to see if he knew what this thing called college
coaching is all about," said director of athletics Bob Scalise. "And he
showed us in the interviewing process that he does. He has a good concept
of what it will take to be successful." Harvard returns 16 lettermen,
including senior captain Noah Welch, from a team that went 18-15-3 last
season. The Crimson won the ECAC tournament championship but lost to Maine
in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.
"The whole team is excited right now, it's going to be a great thing for
the program, a great change," Welch said. "There's a certain attitude about
him, I think, from having won a national championship here and hopefully
that will rub off on our team. Maybe that's what we need to get over the
hurdle of getting past the first round of the NCAAs."
Donato doesn't have definitive expectations for his first year.
"I don't want to say that we are going to be this or going to be that," he
said. "I do expect that we will be a very competitive program. I think I
share the same goal as the hockey players here at Harvard. We want to have
our eyes on the NCAA prize like everybody else, but more importantly it's
the journey there. We want to do things the right way."
The timing, with the NHL facing a work stoppage in September, could not
have been any better for Donato.
"I didn't think the scenario would maybe take place one day," said Donato,
who probably would have attempted to play one more season if the Harvard
job wasn't available. "But with me kind of at the twilight of my career and
the position being open, in a lot of ways the stars have been lined up for
me. I am very fortunate to be standing where I am and I'm so excited about
the opportunity."
Evident by some of the faces at the press conference -- which included
Bruins president Harry Sinden, Bruins coach Mike Sullivan, and former
Harvard coach Bill Cleary -- Donato should have some friends to turn to for
advice.
"Teddy is a guy that I think can solve problems and that's what you do as a
coach," Sullivan said. "You deal with people, you teach the game and you
solve problems on a daily basis. And I believe Teddy has all those
capabilities. Then you combine that with the network of people he has and I
think it makes for a great recipe for success."
"I'm available," Sinden said with a laugh. "I don't do much else."
Cleary believes his former player has what it takes to be a successful coach.
"He has something special that a lot of people don't have," Cleary said.
"He has a great way with people and I think that's the one of the biggest
assets you have to have in coaching. It's more important than X's and O's.
I think the lack of coaching experience will be overcome by his ability to
deal with people."
Paul McNeeley
Friends Coordinator, Harvard Varsity Club
Direct: 617-496-9356
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Fax: 617-496-8296
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