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Word: baseman (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...ended up with a whopping total of six), a single by Mike Dziekan in the fourth, but he ran out of gas and strikes in the sixth. The freshman departed with one run in and runners on first and third following two walks and, yes, an error by second baseman Barry Cronin which allowed the run to score...

Author: By Tom Aronson, | Title: Engineer Nine Ambushes Harvard, 8-7 | 4/14/1976 | See Source »

...Buckley triggered an Exeter surge in the third with a triple and the Red grabbed the lead, 5-4. The Crimson knotted the score in the fifth when George Hughes walked, moved to second on a walk to Charly Caro, and then scored on an error by the first baseman...

Author: By John Blondel, | Title: Yardling Nine Fall in Opener Lose to Exeter Squad, 13-11 | 4/12/1976 | See Source »

...single, a Dave Singleton error, and--you guessed it--a walk loaded the bases, and it was at that point Penn decided to start doing some work of its own. A sacrifice fly brought in run number four, and a single by the hitting star of the day, first baseman Rick Yost (a triple and a homer yet to come) made...

Author: By Tom Aronson, | Title: Penn Nails Harvard Nine With Early-Inning Attack | 4/10/1976 | See Source »

...great thing about spring training is that it's almost as important where the foul balls land as who wins the games. When a White Sox batter lofted one into the parking lot along the first base line of Payne Field in Sarasota, Pirates first baseman Willie Stargell turned to umpire Nestor Chylak and casually remarked, "Somebody got a nod on his car. Did it hit the top or the hood...

Author: By Marc M. Sadowsky and Mike Savit, S | Title: The Grapefruit League: It's Not if You Win or Lose, But How Tan You Get | 4/9/1976 | See Source »

...nearly three weeks Florida and Arizona boasted some of the most elegant of America's unemployed. Locked out of their spring-training camps because of a dispute with the baseball club owners, major leaguers were all over the sunny sandlots at loose ends. The Cincinnati Reds' third baseman, Pete Rose, arrived in his Silver Shadow Rolls-Royce to work out at a West Tampa park normally used by Little Leaguers. New York Mets Pitching Ace Tom Seaver cadged $2 each from a pickup team of ballplayers to buy baseballs for early-March makeshift practice sessions. Like a youthful...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Loosening Up at Last | 3/29/1976 | See Source »

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