Word: balled
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...potent offensive shots into his trademark “I’ll get anything back” game.In Nguyen’s match at No. 3, things refused to go Harvard’s way.“Nothing felt right, I felt a step slow to every ball,” Nguyen said of his 6-3, 6-7, 10-8 supertiebreaker loss. “I’m just going to say it was one of those days when I couldn’t find the court.”Kumar’s match...
...returning for a fifth year],” Mazza said. “It’s been a smooth transition from the Yale game to the game this month. It wasn’t a very long off-season, so it was like going right back into spring ball.”The transition was less fluid for Brown and Tully, who were both working before their decision to sign on to the Italian team. Luckily, it didn’t take long for them to get back into the flow of things.“Once you step...
...four games, as production has increased up and down the order. One veteran, Vance, has come out his midseason slump by hitting .417 with a .611 on-base percentage in the last four games. Senior Matt Kramer has also become a force and has batted .375, blasted two long balls, and driven in six runs since the first game of the Yale series last Saturday.Freshmen are beginning to emerge as well. In the last four games, leadoff hitter Dillon O’Neill and third baseman Sean O’Hara have hit .471 and catcher Tyler Albright has batted...
...replace sophomre Margaux Black in an effort to stop the momentum swing. Madick, though, walked the first batter she faced to load the bases. The next hitter blasted a grand slam over the fences to spoil the Crimson’s lead. “It was a rise ball that wasn’t out of the zone enough,” Allard said. “She got on top of it and hit it out. She was a very good hitter.” Harvard manufactured its runs playing small ball and steadily moving runners. Vertovez bunted...
...delight to interview: warm and witty, by turns conspiratorial confidant and elusive roadblock, but always brilliant and kind. He had unusual flair for a Harvard dean. We will never forget his debut as “Josephine Knowles”—in lipstick, wig, and billowing ball gown—at the Gala celebration of the merger in October 1999. Knowles and then-Provost Harvey V. “Buttercup” Fineberg ’67 serenaded the dignitaries with Gilbert and Sullivan songs personally rewritten for the occasion...