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Men's Track and Field | Engelking and Rotella bring home NESCAC titles

Although two Jumbos brought home individual NESCAC titles at the championship meet on Saturday, the men's track and field team on the whole did not fare as well, missing out on second place by just half a point in part due to a few injuries to key runners. The Jumbos claimed 116 points at Conn. College, while Bates took second with 116.5 and Williams took first with a final score of 158.5 points.


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Softball | Still perfect: Softball moves to 34-0 with doubleheader sweep of Endicott

    With the rap music blaring at Spring Fling just down the road on Saturday afternoon, the only thing ludicrous at Spicer Field was the Jumbos' play, as nationally ranked No. 5 Tufts kept its unblemished record intact with two wins over Endicott College, remaining sharp before hosting the conference tournament later this week.     Endicott, who entered the doubleheader as winners of 16 straight games, ran into a stiff Jumbo defense on Senior Day. In the latter contest, an 8-5 Tufts win, Jumbo sophomore hurler Izzie Santone improved to 16-0 on the season, scattering 12 hits over the complete-game effort.     At the plate in the second game, Tufts took advantage of two Endicott errors, pounding out 11 hits. Senior quad-captain Laura Chapman led the assault with three hits and two runs, while classmate Maya Ripecky added a pair of hits and two RBIs. All but one of the hitters in the Jumbos' lineup recorded a hit, as Tufts used four-run innings in both the first and fifth frames to surge ahead.     Senior pitcher Lauren Gelmetti earned the win in the first game, working all seven innings for her 14th win of the year and giving up just one run in Tufts' 4-1 victory. Senior quad-captain Samantha Kuhles and junior Casey Sullivan each had two hits and drove in a pair of runs.     With the two wins, the Jumbos solidified their stranglehold on the New England region and now only have a doubleheader at Brandeis on Tuesday before kicking off the NESCAC Tournament on Friday.


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Alex Prewitt | Live from Mudville

One week ago, schools across the commonwealth of Massachusetts and the state of Maine took the day off in honor of Patriots' Day, a civic holiday commemorating the anniversary of the Battle of Lexington and Concord. Clearly, I'm not a true Bostonian because it took me roughly six days to realize that the holiday wasn't designed to honor what Tom Brady had done on the field and in the Playboy Mansion or anything else relating to Bill Belichick, Randy Moss or the End Zone Militia. But what if all of our holidays were like that? What if our most hallowed of days were transformed into 24-hour celebrations of all things sports? Well ...


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Women's tennis | Women's tennis cruises past Bowdoin

    In its last regular season match of the season, the nationally ranked No. 19 women's tennis team put the nationally ranked No. 18 Bowdoin Polar Bears on ice in Sunday's 8-1 drubbing in Brunswick, Maine.     Coming off of its worst showing of the season in last weekend's 7-2 loss to Middlebury, the 8-4 Jumbo squad took an early lead over the Polar Bears, sweeping all three doubles matches — the first time the team has swept in nearly a month. In the closest match of the day at No. 3 doubles, senior Mari Homma and junior Erica Miller, who played as a doubles team for the first time since spring break, defeated their Bowdoin opponents 9-8 (7-5). In No. 1 doubles, the No. 2-ranked doubles team in the Northeast, comprised of junior captain Meghan McCooey and sophomore Julia Browne, easily overcame the Northeast's fourth-ranked doubles tandem of Bowdoin's senior captain Sarah D'Elia and freshman Emily Lombardi, 8-3.     In singles play, Tufts secured wins in all but one faceoff in the No. 6 match. In the No. 1 match, nationally ranked No. 15 singles player Browne faced down the nationally ranked No. 35 singles player D'Elia. Improving to 19-2 on the season, Browne toppled her opponent 7-6 (3), 6-3.      Finishing up a busy month of in-conference matchups, in which the Jumbos have crossed rackets with four top-20 teams, Tufts is well-positioned with the start of the NESCAC Tournament coming up this weekend.


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Women's Track and Field | Tufts finishes third behind Williams, Middlebury

Even with personal records being broken and NCAA automatic qualifiers being surpassed, Tufts' spirited challenge of Williams' dominance of NESCAC women's track and field fell a little bit short on Saturday. The Jumbos finished in third place at the NESCAC Championships, racking up 145 points. Williams, with 180 points, captured its 10th straight title, while Middlebury scored 156 points to take second place.




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Women's Lacrosse | Jumbos head to semifinals

Amherst has been a thorn in the women's lacrosse team's side in the past, twice dispatching the Jumbos in past NESCAC first-round encounters. But the top-seeded Jumbos finally had their way Sunday, turning a first-half deficit into a 14-11 victory with one of their best second-half performances of the season to advance to the second round of the NESCAC Tournament for the first time in program history.


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Men's Lacrosse | Tufts gets by Colby in tourney opener

The nationally ranked No. 8 men's lacrosse team, seeded No. 3 heading into NESCAC Tournament play, won its first conference tournament game since 2006, advancing past the first round with a 12-8 win over No. 6-seeded Colby yesterday afternoon at Bello Field.


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Gideon Jacobs | The Pooch Punter

On Thursday, I went to the first game at the new Yankee Stadium. I walked into the main rotunda of the massive, modernized version of baseball's greatest cathedral, and the first thing I saw was a giant fruit stand. We were 10 minutes from the first pitch, and men and women were circling the giant tables of produce, squeezing pears, smelling mangos and inspecting bananas. Maybe some of them were grabbing a healthy alternative to the ballpark frank. Maybe some thought they'd grab a few quick groceries while at the game. I kept walking.



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Women's Lacrosse | Top seed will belong to Jumbos with victory over Bowdoin

    The women's lacrosse team has a chance at history squarely in its control.     Heading into tonight's regular-season finale with Bowdoin, the nationally ranked No. 7 Jumbos have the opportunity to do something that no other Tufts squad has ever done: lock up the No. 1 seed in the NESCAC and home field advantage throughout the playoffs. A matchup with the 8-6 overall, 3-5 NESCAC Polar Bears is all that stands in the way.     Tied atop the conference standings with Colby, the Jumbos have posted a 12-1 (7-1 NESCAC) mark this season, going blow for blow with the defending NESCAC champion Mules all season long. But a decisive 13-9 win over Colby on March 14 back in the second week of the season gives the Jumbos the head-to-head edge now, and regardless of Colby's outcome with Bates tonight, a win over the Polar Bears would guarantee the Jumbos first place.     "We're not concerned with stats or records," sophomore midfielder Amanda Roberts said. "We're just focusing on how we're playing now."     "We're treating it like any other game — it's no different," sophomore goaltender Sara Bloom added.     Riding an eight-game winning streak, Tufts certainly has momentum on its side as it takes on the eighth-place Polar Bears. The Jumbos' most recent triumph, a 16-13 road decision over Conn. College Sunday, was not nearly as narrow as the final tally implies. Tufts carried a 16-9 lead into the closing minutes of the contest before the Camels rallied with four unanswered goals in under three minutes to shrink the gap.     Despite the waning-minutes scare, the Jumbos hung on for the win and netted some valuable experience from the game. Registering 34 shots, the Jumbo offense was firing on all cylinders, a theme it hopes to continue through tonight's finale.     "Shot selection is going to be huge," Roberts said. "It's something that [coach Carol Rappoli] has stressed all year. The attack has gotten better at it throughout the season. We're really dynamic and have a lot of options, so we just need to focus on finishing."     The Jumbos, who lead the league in goals, assists, points and shot percentage, have had a full week to fine-tune their game and prepare for their last obstacle of the regular season. But with the success they've witnessed lately, they don't plan on altering much. The fast-paced offense that has overwhelmed opposing defenses all year should serve them well tonight as they look to add to their already-impressive offensive accomplishments, which include outscoring their opponents 193-118 on the season.     "The offense scored 16 goals [against Conn. College], which is great, but we're not doing anything special [to prepare]," Bloom said. "We've practiced a few things that [Bowdoin] does defensively, so we're prepared for that."     Indeed, the psychological aspect of the game will be more important for the Jumbos and is something that they have continually stressed throughout the year.     "With Conn. College, it was a mental thing," senior co-captain Chrissie Attura said. "We underestimated them, and they took advantage of that. We need to focus on playing our game and not faltering at any point."     "It's very mental for us," Roberts added. "Finishing the regular season up strong and starting the postseason strong are very important."     The implications of the Bowdoin game are not lost on the Jumbos, who won't get much rest before they enter the NESCAC Tournament on Sunday. Regardless of tonight's result, they are guaranteed home field advantage through the quarterfinals since they will finish no worse than second in the league. But the prospect of competing throughout the postseason on the friendly confines of Bello Field is a major motivating factor for Tufts tonight.     "Having home-field advantage is key," Attura said. "It's nice not having to travel, and having lots of fans."     Depending on the outcome of a few NESCAC games today, the Jumbos could face a number of different opponents come Sunday. If Tufts clinches the top seed, Wesleyan would be a likely first-round opponent, as the Cardinals just have to beat last-place Conn. College, coupled with a loss by either Bowdoin or Amherst, in order to secure the No. 8 spot. The Jumbos beat the Cardinals 17-6 on March 28.     If Wesleyan loses, then the Jumbos will face Bowdoin, Bates or Amherst, who are all currently tied in the standings with 3-5 conference records. With all four teams in action today, the standings will undergo some serious reshuffling. And with the exception of Bowdoin, Tufts has faced and beaten all of its potential first-round opponents at some point in the current season.     Despite the implications of NESCAC seeding, which could affect its chances at claiming its first-ever conference title and securing an automatic NCAA bid, Tufts refuses to look beyond tonight's battle or approach it differently from any other contest this year.     "It's going to be a very big game," Roberts said. "And before we step off the field, NESCACs is not going to be in our minds."  






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Seven Questions with Kevin Williams

Full name: Kevin Eugene Williams (yea… Eugene) Hometown: Merrick, NY (Strong Island) Birth date: December 10th, 1986 Zodiac sign: Sagittarius Nickname(s): K-Dubs, Kwilli, Dr. Swagz Favorite pro athlete: Kenny Powers Favorite Tufts athlete: On field -- Brittany Holiday Off field -- Jared Melillo (Do I need to explain?) Special: I have a lot of respect for Ryan Molloy (TU laxer) because he's the biggest jersey chaser at the U. Kevin Williams is a senior midfielder on the nationally ranked No. 8 men's lacrosse team. So far this season, Kevin has nine goals and 11 assists, ranking him sixth on the team in total points. His undying passion for sports, women and film makes him a very unique and diverse member of the Tufts community -- naturally, an interview with Kevin was an opportunity the Daily could not pass up. 1. You were an All-League safety in high school -- why lax at Tufts and not football? Well, there are many reasons for being a sweet laxer in college. One of the benefits is that every time I am at Dewick or C-Mike, freshmen girls just seem to flock to me. Then I realize I'm just standing in front of the fro-yo machine. 2. Considering your development as a player of sports involving excessive amounts of physical contact as well as your propensity to bully people (both on and off the field), to what extent do you go to protect your three attractive sisters from other men? I mean, guys are usually timid when they see my rugged Steve Segal-esque exterior. But underneath all that, there's a little Hugh Grant dying to get out. Just because I rock doesn't mean I'm made of stone. 3. You're an extremely well-respected member of the lacrosse team. You've been called "the guy who's always out there working the hardest." So, as an individual player, what is it that you've been working on the most to improve your game? What kind of adversity have you had to overcome? Well, I just try to make my teammates around me better. Teams have been really trying to shut me down, which opened up the way for D.J. Hessler to get [67] points under the radar so far. I mean, he may have 50 more points than me, but its quality not quantity, right? 4. Mental preparation is also paramount to one's success. How do you get psyched up before a game or practice? I drink seven raw eggs, do 39 calf raises, listen to M.C. Hammer's "2 Legit 2 Quit," then watch Patrick Swayze's fight scene in "Roadhouse." 5. I'm confused. At your game against Conn. College I heard some of the field hockey girls saying you were in a "shooting slump" earlier this year, but I've been watching you all season, and you're good. Damn good. What did they mean? Well, I was in an off-field slump for a while. It just seems that girls here at the U play really good team defense. So I got our goalie Matt Harrigan to help me out. We watched some film and he said I had to go back to the fundamentals (seventh-grade style). He stressed using smileys during "AIM game" and putting a heavy emphasis on Facebook pokes. 6. In "The Kevin Williams Story," who plays you? I am actually in the midst of collaborating with the Pied Piper, R. Kelly, about making a hip-hopera about the life of Kevin Williams. 7. You're about to graduate. How important to you is it to finish your Tufts career on the highest note, like winning NESCACs or making a run towards a national championship? Every year our goal has been to win NESCACs and then the National Championship. This year, more than any other probably, we are definitely capable of doing it. I don't want to look back and have any regrets or think what could have been.


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Ultimate Frisbee team dominates Sectionals

For the first time since 2004, the men's Ultimate Frisbee team won Sectionals this weekend. And it wasn't even close.     The Tufts players -- known as the E-Men -- gave up no more than five points in any game over the weekend at the Metro College Open Sectionals at Goddard Park in Warwick, R.I. The top-seeded and nationally ranked No. 21 E-Men defeated six teams in the field of 18, including a 15-3 beatdown of MIT in the tournament finals.     On Saturday, Tufts won its four games by an average score of 13-2, including a 13-2 win over the Tufts C team, which finished 13th, while the B team came in 10th. Then on Sunday, the E-Men surrendered all of five points against fourth-place Bentley before moving on to take out MIT.     "It was an amazing tournament because we played well and were never challenged by any opponents," said senior co-captain Tyler Bugden, who sat out much of the tournament with a torn hamstring. "It was the first time since 2004 Tufts won Sectionals, and the team is looking super strong. We lost 10 seniors last year who were all very important, and since this is my senior year, it was really exciting for me as the captain."     "We played really well and those are good teams, but we really took it to them," junior co-captain Andrew Hollingworth added. "This was one of the first times all year we've gotten to play in nice weather for a full tournament. The team was eager to take out some of that pent-up frustration on other teams."     No. 22 Harvard came into the tournament as Tufts' biggest rival, having defeated the E-Men in Regionals last year, and Tufts' biggest competition, as the Red Line finished fifth last year at Nationals and came in nationally ranked one spot behind the E-Men. Tufts beat Harvard at the Brown Invite on April 12, however, and while the Red Line beat MIT in the opening round of Sectionals, MIT eked out a 13-11 win over Harvard in the semifinals. Yet MIT, which was without its star senior co-captain Andrew Ji for much of the game, did not have the same luck against Tufts.     "We have an efficient offense, a good defense and everyone on our team can contribute," Bugden said. "Everyone runs hard and doesn't turn over the disc. We play a possession offense, and on defense we generate tons of turnovers. It was a windy day, and we have lots of really good throwers who can throw in the wind. So when you go up 5- or 6-1, it really flusters the other team. It puts pressure on their throwers to make plays, and in the wind, it was difficult for MIT to make plays."     "Everyone was working hard," Hollingworth said. "We brought a lot of defensive intensity. We put pressure on other teams and forced them to take their second, third and fourth, options on offense versus what they prefer to do. On offense, we took care of the disc pretty well. We had great efficiency outside the end zone, in particular in the red zone, which is something we've been working on."     The top five teams at Sectionals qualified for Regionals, which will be held May 2-3 in Hanover, N.H., and teams need to place in the top two to advance to Nationals, which will be held May 22-24 in Columbus, Ohio.     "We're undoubtedly the top team in the region," Bugden said. "It's a tournament format, so anything can happen, but we're a great team and we just have to keep grinding. We need to focus on our imperfections and staying in shape. If we do all that, it'll be like going to the bank and cashing a check."     The E-Men, composed of 21 members, practice two to four times a week and work out twice a week as well. Bugden stressed the team's need to work on end-zone efficiency, resets, transition defense, marking and responding to unfair calls.     "I think everybody's pretty honest, but in high stakes, tempers get heated," Bugden said. "Sometimes, you need to take a step back and realize what actually happened. You need to deliberate with composure and come to a rational conclusion, and that's difficult to do. There are teams that definitely make unfair calls. I'm not going to call anybody out, and we're expecting to play them, and we're expecting them to make unfair calls. We need to be able to respond to that."     The top-seeded team at Regionals will be Middlebury, ranked No. 10 in the nation. Middlebury has not traditionally been an Ultimate powerhouse, but the Pranksters have proven themselves this year, having beaten Williams three times this season. Williams, ranked No. 23, will be the other team at Regionals seeded above Tufts, and the Williams team handed the E-Men their last loss by a single point.     Both Bugden and Hollingworth said that the goal of the season was to qualify for Nationals. The E-Men would have to place in the top two at Regionals to earn a bid.


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Inside the NESCAC Hamilton to fully integrate into the NESCAC by 2011-2012 season

The presidents of the 11 NESCAC member institutions voted on April 15 to make Hamilton College a full-playing member of the conference by the 2011-2012 athletics season, it was announced last Thursday.     The Continentals had maintained an affiliation with the New York-based Liberty League in seven sports -- men's and women's basketball, men's and women's lacrosse, men's and women's soccer and field hockey -- since the NESCAC formally organized ahead of the 2000-01 season. Following a two-year transition period, however, Hamilton will completely integrate into the league for which it was a charter member. "They'll be joining in seven different sports, and they have seen a good deal of success in some of those," NESCAC Executive Director Andrea Savage said. "We've been fortunate in that the teams that are in right now have been very successful, so I think it will just add to the great competition within the conference. There's no doubt about that."     Despite its partial membership in the Liberty League, Hamilton had been abiding by NESCAC policies governing starting dates and number of contests and practices in all 28 of its varsity programs. Thus, besides creating a considerable amount of confusion, Hamilton's dual membership was also putting its student-athletes at a competitive disadvantage, prompting the school to petition for full integration into the NESCAC. "We have certainly enjoyed our partnership with the Liberty League, but we had reached a point where philosophically, we feel more comfortably aligned with the NESCAC schools," Hamilton Athletic Director John Hind said. "As an example, we're abiding by NESCAC rules for starting dates in lacrosse, which means we can't start practice till Feb. 15; meanwhile, everybody in the Liberty League is getting started as soon as they get back from semester break, so they're playing for two or three weeks longer than us," he continued. "We still have to compete with them on opening day, but they have that much more of a base underneath them. That was happening across all seven sports."     Most of the two-year lag between now and the time Hamilton completes its integration into the NESCAC will be spent rearranging the league's schedule in the seven affected sports, all of which currently feature 10 teams. The even number simplified scheduling, particularly in basketball, where each conference member was assigned a travel partner with whom it played common opponents in each weekend of NESCAC play. The addition of an 11th team, however, will require that the conference tweak its schedule to accommodate an odd number of teams, though Savage said the league plans to maintain the travel partner system in basketball.     Hamilton's location further complicates the rescheduling process. The school's campus in Clinton, N.Y. is located roughly 140 miles away from Williams, its closest NESCAC competitor, and anywhere between 400 and 450 miles from three conference opponents in Maine. The league acknowledged Hamilton's distance would play a factor in deciding how to structure schedules from 2011 onward. "We take travel into account whether it's Colby going to Conn. College or Tufts going to Middlebury," Savage said. "When we look at the scheduling, if someone is making a long trip, we take things like minimizing missed class time into consideration. That will certainly be taken into account bringing Hamilton into the schedule, just as it is with the rest of the scheduling we do."     In a period of economic downturn, the league will likely see an increase in travel costs as a result of Hamilton's integration, but Hind downplayed its significance. "It's really not as great of a cost increase as you might see it," he said. "For instance, the greatest charge for the bus is the original getting the charter for the bus. Yes, it costs more for us to travel to Tufts than to travel to Williams, but it's not twice as much even though it's twice as far." The presence of an 11th team likely will not, however, impact postseason play. In each of the seven sports where Hamilton does not hold a NESCAC membership, the top eight teams currently qualify for the conference tournament and earn the right to compete for the NESCAC's automatic bid to the NCAA championships, something that isn't expected to change when Hamilton comes on board. "Right now, as we look at things, the plan will be to keep eight, so Hamilton coming in will not affect that," Savage said. "We will continue our conversations over the next 12 months or so in reviewing scheduling options and tournaments, but right now, the plan is to maintain the eight teams in the tournament."     The transition time was also implemented with consideration for the Liberty League, which will be down to nine full-time members once Hamilton departs. Hind said the league has discussed a possible reshaping of its membership but declined to discuss what that specifically entailed.     "Of vital importance to us was an appropriate separation from the Liberty League to not leave them in the lurch," he said. "We felt as though a two-year period … was fair to that league as an exit strategy."     Of the 21 Hamilton squads that currently have a NESCAC affiliation, the Continentals' golf team has been the most successful, winning the school's most recent NESCAC championship in 2003. Hamilton's NESCAC success has been otherwise limited, however. Of the four NESCAC titles the Continentals have captured all-time, only one has come from outside the golf program, courtesy of the 1988 men's cross country team. Meanwhile, Hamilton's baseball and softball squads have never qualified for the NESCAC Tournament, and neither tennis team has won a match against a conference opponent since 2006.     But the seven programs that will enter the NESCAC in 2011, some of which are competitive on a national level, will undoubtedly raise Hamilton's profile within the conference. Both Continental soccer squads have appeared in the NCAA Tournament in recent seasons, with the women making a 2007 run that featured wins over Tufts and Williams, while in men's basketball, Hamilton has perennially been at or near the top of the Liberty League. The most notable addition, however, could be in women's lacrosse, where the 2008 national champion Continentals will join a cutthroat league that had five schools ranked in the most recent national top 20. "We feel as though we're all highly competitive academic institutions, and this is just one other area of our college now where we'll have an opportunity to present incredibly competitive situations for our student-athletes," Hind said. "We have some programs who have struggled, and we will need to work on getting up to a higher competitive level. We certainly want to be competitive everywhere we can be. And we have some programs where we think we make the NESCAC even more competitive than it has been."


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Men's Crew | Busy weekend pays off for Jumbocrew

    Just two weeks before the New England Championships on Lake Quinsigamond in Worcester, the men's crew came through with an impressive showing on the course that will host the biggest race of the season.


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Despite modest results, Jumbos gain valuable experience on Lake Quinsigamond

A smattering of middle-of-the-pack results best characterized a couple of busy days of rowing for the women's crew after two full days of racing on Lake Quinsigamond over the weekend.     Competition on Sunday during the Baker, Brown, and Class of 2009 Cup – which included boats from WPI, RIT, Mills, William Smith and Tufts – saw both the Jumbos' varsity eight and second varsity stymied by their respective opponents from William Smith. In the varsity race, the Herons (6:50.52) beat out Tufts by less than a second (6:51.47) to take the race, with WPI (6:59.97) and Mills (7:23.47) rounding out the field at third and fourth, respectively.     Meanwhile the second varsity boat (7:01.89) finished runner-up to William Smith by just over three seconds (6:58.70), while another Tufts entry in the race took a distant third (7:27.43) ahead of fourth-place WPI (7:45.72).     On Saturday, Tufts competed against heavyweights Ithaca and Holy Cross, and the Jumbos managed no better than third in any of their races, which also included crews from Conn. College and Colby.     "The Quinsigamond races are pretty much the climax of competition of the spring season, so we went into this thinking we've performed well in our home court [on the Malden]," senior co-captain Kaitlyn Mula said. "And we realize there are really tough competitors out there, i.e. Ithaca, Holy Cross, and maybe some crews we didn't know a whole lot about like William Smith.     "Varsity I know had a very good row as compared to last week, and the 2V was also really good," Mula continued. "But we realized at the end of [Saturday] pretty much across the board, the intensity needed to get kicked up, and not necessarily effort but so far as to say in the race itself, the first half of the race should be more intense than it has been."     Indeed, despite coming up short of posting first-place showings on Sunday due to the surprising output from the Herons, the Jumbos still felt that they had improved from the prior day and could take solace in that.     "When Sunday came, we were racing against WPI, RIT, William Smith -- we definitely met that goal in that we were way more aggressive than we had been on Saturday, but the success in terms of our performance was still middle-of-the-pack," Mula said.     "This weekend has always been an eye-opener for what the competition out there is really going to be like, how fast these crews are, and what we really will be up against in two weeks when we have New Englands and then the week after that at ECACs if we make it there," senior Kate Siegel added. "Like Kaitlyn said, that was something that was a goal for all the crews, between Saturday and Sunday to try and make sure you get that extra aggression with every stroke."     There was also one other high point for the crew on Sunday when the Jumbos took home more than just bragging rights after outracing WPI in the varsity race.     "I know the 1V and the 2V just lost to William Smith, and it was painful, but on the more positive note, we did beat the pants off WPI, which was wonderful," Mula said. "This regatta is where the Baker, Brown and Class of 2009 Cup is awarded, so basically it's this competition between Tufts men's and women's crew versus WPI men's and women's crew and since the 1V beat WPI this year, we were awarded the Brown Cup, and that was one thing that was really special about this regatta."     Middling racing results aside, Tufts knows that it likely gleaned valuable experience over the weekend in preparation for the New England Rowing Championships on Lake Quinsigamond, which take place during the first weekend of May. Adjusting to a course that is markedly different from the Malden might arguably have been the most important gain from this weekend, especially with regard to the mental challenge this move presents.     "Racing on Lake Quinsigamond compared to racing at home is a very different race because it is a straight shot -- it is six lanes across so you have the intensity [and the] sheer number of boats can be a great motivator," Siegel said. "At the same time though, because physically you're just going straight the whole time, there's less to go off of in terms of not feeling like you're progressing as much.     "You're basically seeing the same thing the entire race and so it's something, even as a senior, you sort of have to get used to every year, that transition from [the Malden] that has a lot of turns and has a lot of place marks to one where you have to continually motivate yourself [without] seeing your progression," Siegel continued.     Taking all that into account, going up against tougher crews and rowing on a different body of water will probably play into Tufts' hand come the postseason.     "I feel like our performance this past weekend is a good base for New Englands," Mula said. "New Englands is really what matters to us; that's our priority right now. We've definitely established our goals of being more aggressive at the first half of the race because we're going to meet teams where it's not going to be so easy to catch them in the end, so from here on out that's going to be the plan."     The Jumbos return to the Malden this weekend for the last home race of the year versus crews from Middlebury, Simmons, Smith, and Wellesley -- a school that Tufts has experienced wins and losses against this season already. After cruising past the Blue in the first race of the spring on March 28, the varsity eight slipped up against them two weeks later. The second and third varsity boats, however, have yet to lose to Wellesley this season.     "I'm sure the 1V has some motivation with Wellesley," Mula said. "The 2V and 3V are probably going to be fighting them off because [Wellesley's] going to want it. They're going to want to beat us; they're probably excited at the prospect of getting some revenge. So we just need to hold them off and keep doing what we've been doing. The 1V is really excited ... this past weekend was much better for them than the weekend before [when they lost to Wellesley], so they are out for revenge too."     "Senior race is the last home race of the season for us, so I think that's going to be a big motivator for the mental-emotional side for a big part of our team," Siegel added. "We have a good number of seniors on the team, and they're spread throughout all boats. I think that's going to be an added push to practice this week, and I think we're all looking forward to it.