The last time Harvard had a new football coach, Bill Clinton was halfway into his first term. Mariah Carey had just released her first holiday album, with one track that looked set to become a Saturnalia standard. “Pulp Fiction” had just delivered Quentin Tarantino his first blockbuster, and Joe Biden was just a junior senator. In 1994, when Tim Murphy was beginning his first season at the helm of the Harvard football program — a tenure that would bring 10 Ivy League titles to Cambridge and solidify his reputation as the most impactful coach in Harvard history — the man who would eventually succeed him was just 10 years old.