Before each season, Harvard men’s basketball coach Tommy Amaker and  his staff place role cards above each player’s locker. The cards carry a  few simple points of emphasis, defining the individual role a player  must take on for the team to achieve success. The bullet points tell  their own story, illustrating the team’s collective belief in a sum  greater than its parts—a conviction in doing your job, not more and not  less.
On a team as talented as Amaker has ever had, the cards are  even more important. The Crimson, when healthy, goes two-deep at each  position and there are more three-star recruits on the team’s bench than  on the rest of the league’s starting rosters combined. Co-captain  Brandyn Curry and senior Kyle Casey, All-Ivy League talents as juniors,  have been forced to adopt new roles on a deeper team, playing fewer  minutes and focusing on different areas.
“You have to do what is  best for the team,” Casey said. “Maybe my freshman and sophomore year I  had a bigger load in terms of attacking and looking for my shot, but I  am focusing on what Coach wants us to do.”
Working within the  system will be crucial for the Crimson (18-4, 5-1 Ivy) as it heads to  the Empire State this weekend for its first pair of conference road  games. Fresh off a 74-67 loss to Yale (11-11, 5-1) that snapped a  19-game home winning streak, Amaker stressed that the team must bounce  back.
“I am expecting our guys to play better,” Amaker said. “Does  that always translate into victory? No. But we didn’t play well this  past weekend.... We have shown every time this season so far that after a  loss—and fortunately, there haven’t been a lot—we have done what we  always talk about, which is regrouping and responding.”
In a positive turn for the team, the  coach said he expects junior Jonah Travis and sophomore Agunwa Okolie,  both restricted for the past four games, to be at full health against  Cornell (1-19, 0-6) and Columbia (14-9, 3-3), giving Amaker a ten-man  rotation, extending the bench, and reducing starters’ minutes.
Minus  the reserves, last weekend three players—sophomore Siyani Chambers,  junior Wesley Saunders, and co-captain Laurent Rivard—logged at least 34  minutes a game. Amaker remarked afterwards that tired legs were a  factor in the team’s 35-percent shooting over the two games, 10 percent  under its season average.
“At this point in the year, it becomes a  grind,” Amaker said. “Maybe our legs weren’t there initially [last  weekend], but then it became contagious. We didn’t shoot well, and it  cost us Saturday.”
On Friday, Harvard will be seeking revenge  against the Lions after Columbia dealt the Crimson a 15-point loss the  last time the Crimson went to New York. Little-used then-sophomore Steve  Frankowski exploded for 27 points as the Lions shot 51 percent from the  floor and put the game out of reach early in the second half.
“They  beat us last year; our guys know that,” Amaker said. “We will see where  we are this year. They are 3-3 in the league, and they have two games  at home [where they could] put themselves in great position. We realize  what is at stake.”
Going on the road also means antagonistic  crowds in New York and Ithaca, which for Casey and Curry will mean jeers  directed at the seniors’ leaves of absence in the wake of the  Government 1310 cheating investigation last fall. Against Brown, a  contingent of road fans began ‘cheater’ chants when Casey stepped to the  free throw line—something the senior said he is ready for this weekend.
“Oh,  it’s coming,” Casey said. “Essentially, it doesn’t affect me. I like  playing in hostile environments and it’s a beautiful thing. I call it  the Jeremy Lin effect because I have never seen it so perfectly  executed—when someone steps into the gym and gets booed for whatever  reason, and they walk out and you can damn near hear a pin drop.”
Casey’s  card is simple: be the back line of the defense and be a monster  competitor on the boards. As the team’s defensive anchor and vocal  presence, Casey says it is critical that he and the team tune out both  fans and the past and focus on what matters—the game.
“What  happened, happened,” Casey said. “We accepted it and learned from it.  Whether they are yelling my name or calling me a cheater or talking  about the game, I gotta play my game.”

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