Word: baseness
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...rest of the game Princeton could do but little at the bat. Harvard was more fortunate and scored runs in both the eighth and ninth. Rand got as far as third on his single, a stolen base and a wild pitch and came in on an error...
Earned runs - Princeton 5, Harvard 1. Two-base hits - Trenchard, Otto, Whittemore. Sacrifice hit - Brooks. Stolen bases - Payne, Bradley, Scannell, Rand, Burgess, Whittemore 2. Hit by pitched ball - Gunster. Passed ball. - Williams. Wild pitch - Wilson. Struck out - Williams, Brooks, Highlands 3, Scannell, Wrenn, Burgess, Adams 2. Double play - Trenchard and Ward. Time 1h. 45m. Umpire - Adams...
Ames and O'Malley really played good ball for Harvard. The pitching of Ames was what kept the score down. O'Malley watched the bases well and never let Ames' occasional wild pitches escape. Capt. Griffin gave a good exhibition at first base. Wrenn and Whittemore went to pieces toward the end, especially in that ninth inning. The Harvard outfielders had little to do in the field, but managed to hit the ball when they came...
...Yale catcher played good baseball, but neither Gunther nor Peck was equal to Ames in the pitcher's box. Colgate's work at first base was the best baseball of the afternoon. The rest of the infield was only fairly good for a class team. The outfield was particularly wretched. Several muffs of long flies will help to account for Harvard's rather long list of runs...
Earned runs - Harvard '96 4, Yale '96 1. Two-base hits - Hedges, Paine, Colgate Adams. - Three - base hits - Whittemore, Selfridge. Home run - Adams. Struck out - Hedges, Twombly, Root 2, Ames, Adams 2, Selfridge. Double play - Taylor and Colgate. Passed ball - O'Malley. Wild pitch - Peck. Time - 2h. Umpire - Mullen...