Word: baseness
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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...Holmes Field, yesterday afternoon. The game was loosely played on both sides, and both pitchers were hit rather freely, though Paine was somewhat the steadier. Harvard has hardly played worse this season. Besides the six errors there was much ill-judged playing, particularly in base-running, two opportunities to score being lost by rishking too much...
Harvard started the scoring in the first inning with three runs. Dean knocked a pop fly, which Crolius misjudged and got to second. Burgess flied out to Putnam. Haughton got his base on balls and Scannell hit safely to centre, bringing in Dean and landing Haughton on third. Scannell stole second. Rand made a clean single, which was fumbled by Cook, and Haughton and Scannell scored. Stevenson knocked a fly to Cook, and Beale was out on an easy grounder to Tabor...
...characterized by snappy playing, both at the bat and in the field, while Harvard seemed to play in a most listless manner. The only redeeming feature of the work of the Harvard nine was the manner in which Paine and Loughlin caught two Brown men off second base in the first inning...
Brown made her first run in the second inning on a base on balls and a two-base hit by Cook, which scored the runner. In the third inning four more runs were made on a base on balls, aided by errors of Paine and Loughlin and hits by Fultz, Lauder, Rodman and Gammons. No runs were made from this point on until the seventh inning both sides playing good ball...
...seventh inning Brown scored three more runs on errors by Loughlin and Stevenson and a two-base and three-base hit by Boyd and Cook respectively...